4.7 Article

Metal Microwires Functionalized with Cell-Imprinted Polymer for Capturing Bacteria in Water

Journal

ACS APPLIED POLYMER MATERIALS
Volume 5, Issue 5, Pages 3235-3246

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsapm.2c01886

Keywords

cell-imprinted polymer (CIP); bacteria imprinted polymer; microwire; CIP microwire; bacterial capture

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This study optimized a bulk polymerization methodology to uniformly functionalize stainless steel microwires with cell imprinter polymers (CIPs) for enhanced selectivity of microorganism capture. A CIP coating with a thickness of 2.2 +/- 0.4 μm, imprinted with E. coli as the template, was successfully achieved. The results demonstrated that CIP coatings with a fourplex composition showed higher capture efficiency compared to single-monomer CIP coatings.
Molecularly imprinted polymers (MIPs) and cell imprinter polymers (CIPs) have emerged as synthetic recognition elements in biomimetic sensors. In this paper, we have conducted a parametric study to optimize a bulk polymerization methodology for uniform functionalization of stainless steel microwires (MWs) with CIPs comprising single to fourplex combinations of functional monomers (FMs). MWs are widely used in biosensors, and their functionalization with single-FM MIPs has been demonstrated. Complex MIPs comprising multiple FMs have shown enhanced selectivity toward microorganisms, but their coating on MWs has yet to be shown. Moreover, imprinting microorganisms into these coatings has not been reported. In our studies, solvent, FM, cross linker-to-FM ratio, polymerization temperature, and time were found to significantly influence the thickness and uniformity of CIP coatings on MWs. Reproducible CIP coatings with a thickness of 2.2 +/- 0.4 mu m, imprinted with E. coli OP50 as the template, were achieved. E. coli rebinding assays demonstrated a 76 +/- 10% capture efficiency in a suspension with an initial bacteria count of 104 CFU/mL, using a 3 cm long CIP-MW with an optimized fourplex CIP composition, while the capture efficiency obtained by using a single-monomer CIP composition was 30 +/- 5%. Our results indicated a higher binding capacity of fourplex CIP-MWs to target bacteria, while nonsignificant binding was obtained using single-monomer CIP-MWs. The addition of N-vinylpyrrolidone significantly increased the binding performance due to its hydrophobic-hydrophilic functional groups interacting with counterparts on the surface of bacterial cells. The developed CIP-MWs can be integrated with microfluidic sensing systems as low-cost and stable working electrodes for future transduction of CIP-target binding events to an electrical read-out in CIP-based electrochemical biomimetic sensors.

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